When were the Iliad and Odyssey created? - A late Bronze Age story recalled in Iron Age times - (Relating to a Linked-in Discussion Group) “Mutating Genes in Homer”: Genomes and language provide clues on the origin of Homer's classic. Hosted by Ellie Rose Elliott 03.07.13 By Mel Copeland (response to Ellie Rose Elliott) Other clues in the dating of the Iliad and Odyssey involve the tradition of cremation and raising a tumulus over the dead, such as the case of Patroclus and Achilles (who was placed in the tumulus of Patroclus), the transition from bronze to iron, and mythological characters and their dating. The latest dated tumuli found in Greece might establish the latest date in which the Iliad could have been conceived, for the bard of the Iliad would not have remembered tumuli burials had they ceased to be practiced for several hundred years. Plutarch’s “Lives” – The life of Alexander – says that Alexander placed offerings at Achille’s “grave marker” when he visited Troy, that it was still there even in his day. The Greeks practiced shaft –grave inhumation (visible at Mycenae i.e., the Grave Circle) and cremation/tumuli burial. The Grave Circle is dated Late Helladic I, 1550-1500 B.C., and the tumuli are dated Late Helladic II (1500-1400). (Late Helladic III is 1400-1060 B.C.) By 1200 B.C. all of the Mycenaean cities had been destroyed. Pausanias’ book states that when he toured Mycenae a local guide showed him the tumulus of Agamemnon outside the walls (not within the Grave Circle). The tumulus of Agamemnon would have to date after 1180 B.C., when Troy was destroyed, thus suggesting that either the dating of the tumuli is wrong or Agamemnon was not buried in a tumulus. But the practice in the Iliad suggests that like Achilles and Patroclus he also would be buried in a tumulus. Another important note is that Troy VIIa had a lot of Grey-Minyan ware, common to Orchomenos, the home of the Minyans. Jason’s mother was believed to come from the line of the Minyans (king Minyas), and the Iliad says 30 ships were supplied by the Minyans, led by Ascalaphos and Ialmenos. The abundance of the Grey-Minyan ware might be attributed to the ten-year-long occupation in the siege of Troy, or an actual infusion of Greek settlers from Orchomenos. Still, the latest date of Grey-Minyan ware in Orchomenos could set the the latest date of the Iliad. Also, urnfields were found at Troy as well as a tumulus listed in the Iliad as “Dancing Myrines Barrow. “ Urnfields can be traced up the Danube, significantly among the ancient Vinca culture, and ultimately over the Alps in the early Etruscan, Villanovan Culture. The Etruscans also practiced both inhumation and cremation, placing their cremated dead in Urnfields, in tumuli carved into the tufa and rock-cut tombs. Tumuli spread from the Scythians et al., around the Black Sea littoral to the Caspian and Ural Seas, the Thracians, Lydians, Phrygians, Greeks, Illyrians, Etruscans, Iberians, Britains, and to northern Germany. A timber-lined barrow in Germany (the Hochdorf Grave Barrow) is similar to British tumuli and looks identical to the main tumulus “of Midas” in Gordion, Phrygia. The double horse burial in Gordion’s tumulus KY is like the Scythian double grave burial in Tuva, Russia. Finally the timber-lined tombs within the barrows from 1 When were the Iliad and Odyssey created? - A late Bronze Age story recalled in Iron Age times - Scythia to Germany lead back eastward, among a red-haired people who dressed in plaids, of the Altai Mountains, bordering the Tarim Basin, called Tocharians, who buried their dead in hollowed-out tree trunks. Often associated with tumuli were megalithic structures (single standing stones (menhirs), stone circles, recumbent stone circles and portal tombs (dolmens). Besides European sites, dolmens have been found along the Black Sea coast of Georgia (ancient Colchis) that are similar to Irish dolmons, southern India and even Korea and Japan. Menhirs were often found atop Scythian tumuli, perhaps used as boundary stones, as in Italy. The Easter Aquhorthies recumbent stone circle, from Aberdeenshire.gov.uk illustrates a recumbent stone circle that matches the description of a court described in the late 13th century Njal's Saga. A similar court was held by Agamemnon and his chiefs, described in the Iliad, where Agamemnon sat in judgment upon a recumbent stone, while the chiefs sat facing him within the stone circle. A standing stone (menhir?) was listed in the Iliad, chapter 21, as a stone that marked the turn-around in the chariot races held during the funeral games of Achilles’ friend Patroclus. Thus, the practice of holding court in a stone circle may be relevant to the dating of the Iliad – with respect to any like practice in Greece. We suspect that stone circles in Britain would have been used in a similar manner. Bronze Age funeral games around the tumuli The funeral and games remind us of the funerals of the Scythians, described by Herodotus, which included a wagon/chariot of the chief, sacrificed concubines and personal guard (one group of warriors was mounted - impaled on staffs in the horses around the chief) and treasure. At the time the funeral celebrations took place, the dead chief would have been placed on a wagon and carted around the territory of his domain. Sacrifices at the tumuli also took place in the burial of Patroclus. Achilles sacrificed Trojan slaves before Patroclus’ funeral pyre and also cattle and sheep. He put some horses atop the funeral pyre. Patroclus’ ashes were collected in an urn and a mound was thrown over it. When Achilles was killed by Paris, a similar event took place and his ashes were placed in an urn next to that of Patroclus. In the Iliad the funeral of Patroclus also included a fine funeral feast and games which consisted of archery, javelin throwing, stone hurling, wrestling, chariot racing, etc., as later practiced in the Olympic Games (begun ~400 B.C.). If Patroclus was buried about 1180 B.C. then we may ask what happened to the practice of “games” in the interregnum between 1180 B.C. and the beginning of the Olympic Games in 400 B.C. The funeral games were part of the tumuli culture, when the tumuli ceased to be raised the games would have presumably ceased. Weapons and tools in the Late Bronze Age and Early Iron Age As noted, Achilles used a hunk of iron instead of a stone in the stone hurling contest. The hunk of iron is a signal to us that the Greek army that invaded Troy was of the “Iron Age” (the date of the Iron Age varied from culture to culture). The Iron Age in Anatolia began with the Hittites (1450-1200 B.C.); in 2 When were the Iliad and Odyssey created? - A late Bronze Age story recalled in Iron Age times - Central Europe the Iron Age began in the 8th century B.C. and the Villanovans (~1,000 B.C.) were apparently the earliest Iron Age culture in Central and Northern Italy. The Iron Age of the Near East is believed to be from 1200-1000 B.C., with continuity with the Late Bronze Age towards 1,000 B.C. In the Iliad the weaponry is bronze, except special gifts that had “steel” points offered by Achilles to the winners. In spite of the special nature of the gifts, there are several comments in the Iliad that repeat the fact that iron was in use: Book V, Book VI, Book VIII refer to cities with “iron gates,” Book IX refers to “grey steel,” Book X refers to a man pleading for his life “I can pay a ransom, I have gold and bronze and wrought iron at home.” Book XIII says that Telamonian Aiias (Ajax) would yield to no man alive… if steel or stones can break his bones.” Book XIX says “…and cold steel reaps the fields.” Book XXIII, “Funeral of Patroclus,” Achilles produced a lump of roughcast iron which he took from Eetion, after he killed him, and he said to those who wish to contend for that prize, “No shepherd or plowman will need to visit the city for iron, there will be plenty at home.” Finally, shifting to the Odyssey we see the opening of the story with Athena disguised as a captain of a ship carrying a cargo of iron visiting Odysseus’ palace in Ithika. A ship with iron ore cargo clearly puts this portion of the Homeric story in the Iron Age. I suggest that the Greeks of the Trojan War were clearly Iron Age men, though equipped with bronze weapons, and had plenty of iron at home; a Trojan ally about to be killed offered iron as his ransom as well, and the fact that they need not go to the city for iron suggests that iron must have been used in plowing and shepherding. If we use the criteria of a transition at the end of the Bronze Age to the Iron Age, where both bronze weapons were in use as well as iron, then we might expect that the Iliad was conceived about 1,000 B.C. Another work, the Rig Veda, which is believed to have been created about 1,200 B.C., describes the Aryan invaders of the Indus Valley attacking “iron-gated cities,” though weaponry in those early chapters of the Rig Veda list bronze weapons, as I recall. Since we know that Troy VIIa was destroyed in 1180 B.C.
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